Best Times and Places to Find Magic Mushrooms

Best Times and Places to Find Magic Mushrooms

Mushrooms have been used for centuries by traditional people and shamans or medicine men to go into altered states of consciousness and visit other dimensions. Magic mushrooms or hallucinogenic fungi such as the fly agaric or Amanita muscaria must be used carefully as they can be toxic, especially when identified incorrectly. Many species or varieties of mushrooms that may appear very similar can have vastly different properties.

Mushroom identification out in the woods or forests is a skill our ancestors acquired eons ago, but in our modern age that puts more value on science and material wealth than appreciation of nature and spirituality, being expert at identifying specific plants and knowing their applications are talents and abilities that have fallen by the wayside. Unless you are a mycologist, a mushroom scientist, or a serious student of the different kinds of mushrooms that grow in nature, you are likely to be ill equipped to correctly know the difference between, for example, an Amanita muscaria and one of its look-alike cousins in the mushroom family.

When it comes to finding any kind of mushroom out in the wild, your search will be most productive if you know not only when but also where to do your looking. Wild mushrooms are not like vegetables in a garden that are planted and harvested on a convenient time schedule. To the uninitiated observer it may seem that they have minds of their own, appearing and disappearing with very little rhyme or reason. But, like our ancestors of old who were in tune with the natural rhythms of the earth, those who closely study wild fungi know there are likely areas and seasons when one’s quest for these marvelous morsels will be most productive.

In the Northern Hemisphere, Amanita muscaria grow as natives all through the temperate and boreal regions. In addition, they have accidentally been transported to a large number of Southern Hemisphere countries. Searches will be most productive in woodlands where birch, pine, cedar fir and spruce trees are abundant. Although they are most often found in the fall, the seasonal variations are dependant on various climate zones. Whereas in the greatest areas of North America they appear during the summer and autumn, in Pacific coastal regions they come out later, in the late fall and early winter.

In some parts of Australia, particularly in the southeast, Amanita grows like a weed, and there are concerns, especially in rainforest areas around Victoria and Tasmania that it could be pushing out some native species.

For someone desiring to plant their own garden of Amanita mushrooms, they are advised to do so in the autumn or spring. Most of the growth happens underground during spring and summer, and depends on how much rainfall there is, or, if you are watering the garden yourself, according to how much moisture the soil contains.

Watch the video related to growing mushroom

fragment of a discovery channel video about the rainforest. I like the mushroom part and actually it is not that difficult to make a similar video

Help answer the question about growing mushroom

A player finds a mushroom growing on his line of putt. What is the ruling?
This is in reference to golf.

About Author

Advice on the easiest way to find Amanita muscaria mushrooms is available online at the Amanita muscaria report website, http://amanitamuscariareport.com.

2 Responses to “Best Times and Places to Find Magic Mushrooms”

  • RonAlmeida says:

    Yes we are now so dazzled by all the technological tinsel that we have no time for ideas offered to us by mother nature.
    A pity.

  • CL Smooth says:

    wet grassy fields, humid areas, 2 or 3 days after a good rain. i live near amesbury Ma, lots of fields n such. pastures are the best, but the cow dung theory only works after the dung has started to rot, that could take weeks. look for mushrooms with spores that are dark brown to purple or black. light brown to rust brown or light brown could be potentially deadly. the really dark colored spores are a general sign of psilocybin, the chemical in shrooms that makes you "trip." a good way to test the spores is to cut the cap from the stem and put the cap spore side down on a piece of white paper. after about a half an hour, life up the cap, if a dark brown/purple/black imprint remains, theres an extremely good chance you have a magic mushroom. Another way to test the mushroom is when handled, see if the stem bruises a blue color. Not black though, that can be dangerous. If the stem bruises blue and the Spores are a dark brown/purple/black, you my friend are going to have one hell of a fun time.

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